Which lacks the straght no. While the answer above may lead a reader such as myself to believe that you can work around and use Class<T>, this is wrong. Class<T> is a type declaration, but you’ll still need a instance of it to be able to call newInstance.
Now, in c# is rather trivial to do:

And, as my long time readers¹ will know, I’m a C# guy. And being that, I expected to be able to do the same in Java. Now, why isn’t it possible? See, Java doesn’t really have generics… It’s implementation of generics is all done in the compiler instead of in the JVM. And this being the case, generic type information isn’t compiled to bytecode (the only answer in StackOverflow I found mentioned it was this one), and exists only during compile time. This is called Type Erasure. Now, Oracle sells it as a good thing (I disagree, of course). Footnotes